Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2589233 | International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health | 2006 | 5 Pages |
Degenerate PCR primers in silico based on the two urease structural genes, ureA and ureB, were designed for urease-positive thermophilic Campylobacter (UPTC). Resultant PCR amplification employing these primers generated an amplicon of approximately 2 kb, which was cloned and sequenced in UPTC (n=12n=12) isolated from various parts of Europe and Japan. Overall, sequence similarities were shown to be 96.7 to 99.9%. Following sequence alignment analysis, the approximate 1.96 kb regions were deduced to consist of parts of ureA (about 570 bps) and ureB (about 1390 bps) with an overlapping region between the ureA and ureB gene loci. Although a total of 144 heterogeneous sites of all substitutions were located throughout this region, the substitution ratio was higher in the ureA region (1/Ω̲10bases) than in the ureB region (1/Ω̲15bases). A resulting dendrogram was constructed, which was based on the nucleotide sequence data of 12 UPTC isolates and demonstrated that the UPTC were genetically variable. They formed a major cluster with Helicobacter, separate from the other urease-producing bacteria examined, suggesting a shared ancestry between UPTC and Helicobacter.